Is Asbestos a Problem in China?

One day a few years ago, a Chinese friend of mine asked me about jiaquan (甲醛). “Huh?” I had to look it up. Turns out it means “formaldehyde.”

At that point, I started to realize how many people in China are concerned about formaldehyde—and for good reason. Formaldehyde is in lots of everyday products, and it causes cancer.

But there’s another common building material out there, and it also causes cancer. But until I looked it up for this article, I didn’t know how to say it in Chinese: asbestos, shimian (石棉). I think that’s a sign that asbestos isn’t on as many people’s minds here.

Really? Asbestos Isn’t a Thing in China?

But is that just my biased experience? I searched for both terms on Zhihu, a popular question-answer site in China. “Formaldehyde” turned up almost 20,000 references. “Asbestos” turned up 4,000.

Asbestos seems to get only a small fraction of the attention that formaldehyde gets. But should it?

What is Asbestos?

Asbestos is a mineral that makes a great fiber. People use that fiber in lots of building materials, like insulation, paints, electric wiring, wall boards, and floor tiles. Asbestos might be all around us.

Should I Be Concerned?

When any of these materials break apart, the asbestos can become airborne and get into our lungs. Asbestos fibers can lodge in the lining of the throat, lungs, or stomach, causing cancerous mutations.

There’s even a type of cancer called “mesothelioma,” for which asbestos is the only scientifically proven cause.

But the data shows China is a major asbestos consumer. In 2012, China consumed the most asbestos of any nation.

China has made some moves to get rid of asbestos. When China built venues for the Beijing Olympics, it declared that it was not using asbestos cement, which had been the norm. Current laws say that asbestos should not be in car brakes and other products.

What You Should Know

Asbestos is the most dangerous once disturbed. When fibers become airborne, we can breathe them in or ingest them.

Your home and office materials in China may contain asbestos. Use caution with materials likely to contain asbestos, such as wall board, cement, roofing, or insulation. The most dangerous times are during construction and remodeling.

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